Floating point numbers
Floating point numbers (also known as "floats", "doubles", or "real numbers")
can be specified using any of the following syntaxes:
Formally as of PHP 7.4.0 (previously, underscores have not been allowed):
The size of a float is platform-dependent, although a maximum of approximately 1.8e308
with a precision of roughly 14 decimal digits is a common value (the 64 bit IEEE
format).
Warning
Floating point precision
Floating point numbers have limited precision. Although it depends on the
system, PHP typically uses the IEEE 754 double precision format, which will
give a maximum relative error due to rounding in the order of 1.11e-16.
Non elementary arithmetic operations may give larger errors, and, of course,
error propagation must be considered when several operations are
compounded.
Additionally, rational numbers that are exactly representable as floating
point numbers in base 10, like 0.1
or
0.7
, do not have an exact representation as floating
point numbers in base 2, which is used internally, no matter the size of
the mantissa. Hence, they cannot be converted into their internal binary
counterparts without a small loss of precision. This can lead to confusing
results: for example, floor((0.1+0.7)*10)
will usually
return 7
instead of the expected 8
,
since the internal representation will be something like
7.9999999999999991118...
.
So never trust floating number results to the last digit, and do not compare
floating point numbers directly for equality. If higher precision is
necessary, the arbitrary precision math functions
and gmp functions are available.
For a "simple" explanation, see the » floating point guide
that's also titled "Why don’t my numbers add up?"
Converting to float
From strings
If the string is
numeric
or leading numeric then it will resolve to the
corresponding float value, otherwise it is converted to zero
(0
).
From other types
For values of other types, the conversion is performed by converting the
value to int first and then to float. See
Converting to integer
for more information.
Note:
As certain types have undefined behavior when converting to
int, this is also the case when converting to
float.
Comparing floats
As noted in the warning above, testing floating point values for equality is
problematic, due to the way that they are represented internally. However,
there are ways to make comparisons of floating point values that work around
these limitations.
To test floating point values for equality, an upper bound on the relative
error due to rounding is used. This value is known as the machine epsilon,
or unit roundoff, and is the smallest acceptable difference in calculations.
$a and $b are equal to 5 digits of
precision.
Example #1 Comparing Floats
<?php
$a = 1.23456789;
$b = 1.23456780;
$epsilon = 0.00001;
if (abs($a - $b) < $epsilon) {
echo "true";
}
?>
NaN
Some numeric operations can result in a value represented by the constant
NAN
. This result represents an undefined or
unrepresentable value in floating-point calculations. Any loose or strict
comparisons of this value against any other value, including itself, but except true
, will
have a result of false
.
Because NAN
represents any number of different values,
NAN
should not be compared to other values, including
itself, and instead should be checked for using is_nan().